'Anything might happen' - Kipchoge says ahead of 2023 Berlin Marathon
23rd September 2023
The race is set to gun off at 1115EAT.
- Kipchoge set a world record time of 2hr 01min 09sec in the German capital in 2022, beating his own previous mark by 30 seconds for his fourth Berlin Marathon win.
- But his sixth place at the Boston Marathon in April, where he fell back after leading over most of the course, had some questioning whether the 38-year-old's best days are behind him.
- Kipchoge's biggest rival is likely to be fellow Kenyan Amos Kipruto, who won the 2022 London Marathon.
Kenyan
marathon world record-holder Eliud Kipchoge was confident on Friday he could
overcome his recent form dip and challenge for his fifth Berlin Marathon crown.
Kipchoge
set a world record time of 2hr 01min 09sec in the German capital in 2022,
beating his own previous mark by 30 seconds.
But the
two-time Olympic gold medallist's sixth place at the Boston Marathon in April,
where he fell back after leading over most of the course, had some questioning
whether the 38-year-old's best days are behind him.
Speaking to
the media in the German capital ahead of Sunday's race, Kipchoge said previous
setbacks had taught him not to give up.
Kipchoge
said he "learned a lot" from his 2022 win, "but you know last
year is last year. It was 2022 and 2023 is a different game altogether".
"You're
approaching it in a different way but you know when you are inside the race
anything might happen.
"We
follow what's in our hands actually inside the race."
Asked if he
was feeling any pre-race nerves, the Kenyan said: "Absolutely I'm nervous.
Your nervousness shows you are ready for the task."
Kipchoge's
biggest rival is likely to be fellow Kenyan Amos Kipruto, who won the 2022
London Marathon.
Sitting
alongside Kipchoge, Kipruto said he was competing with himself rather than his
countryman.
"I
will be competing for my personal best. The biggest target is to compete with
my time," Kipruto said.
"If I
go beyond that, I will be happy."
After arriving
in the German capital on Wednesday, Kipchoge wrote on Instagram "it's good
to be back in Berlin, it always feels like coming home."
"Only
a few more days until the Berlin Marathon - I can't wait."
Asked on
Friday for his favourite places along the marathon track, Kipchoge joked:
"I remember (the point) where it was 400 metres to go -- that's what is in
my mind."
Kipchoge
has won 15 marathons, including four in both Berlin and London.
He won
Berlin in 2015, 2017, 2018 and 2022 - the latter two in world record times.
A win on
Sunday and he would move past Ethiopian Haile Gebrselassie into outright first
on the list of Berlin Marathon victories.
In 2022,
Kipchoge ran the first half in less than an hour, which gave rise to hopes he
may best the hallowed two-hour mark.
In the
second half of the race he slowed slightly, but still finished with a world
record time.
Twice he
has run times better than his current world record, including once under two
hours, becoming the only man to do so, but both did not court as they were not
in an open competition, as per World Athletics rules.
Kipchoge
has said he wants to use Berlin to prepare for the 2024 Paris Olympics and his
bid for an unprecedented third Olympic gold medal in the marathon.
Some 45,000
runners are set to take part in Sunday's race, where conditions regularly
produce fast times.
Berlin is a
flat course with fewer corners than other major city marathons, with the city's
asphalt streets easier on the joints than concrete.
Weather
conditions are also conducive to faster times, with little wind in September,
with temperatures between 10C to 16C.
In the
women's event, 2022 Berlin winner Tigist Assefa, 26, is the favourite.
Despite
coming within 90 seconds of the world mark last year, the Ethiopian said:
"I'm not thinking about the world record. I want to improve."
© Agence
France-Presse